
- Missoula Flood Deposit
- Grand Coulee Dam
- Turtle Rock Island
Turtle Rock Island near Lincoln Rock State Park. Originally a simple rocky hill on the south bank of the Columbia River, US Highway 2 ran through it. The construction of the Rocky Reach Dam in 1960 caused the formation of Lake Entiat around this hill, cutting it off from the rest of the south bank, submerging the old US Highway 2, and creating Turtle Rock Island. It is now a protected wildlife area accessible only by boat. - Grand Coulee Dam
- Grand Coulee Dam
- Grand Coulee
- Banks Lake
- Grand Coulee
- Grand Coulee
- Teeth of the Coulee
Grand Coulee, alongside Banks Lake - Pine
Male pine cone, occurring on the same tree as the large woody female cones. - Rocky Reach Dam
Columbia River, seen from Lincoln Rock State Park - Steamboat Rock
- Lincoln Rock and Swakane Canyon
Lincoln Rock, at the southeast end of Swakane Canyon, Wenatchee WA - Steamboat Rock State Park
- Turtle Rock Island
Island in Lake Entiat, created in 1962 when the Rock Reach Dam was constructed. - Looking up
- No Warning Signs
- Lake Entiat
- Butte and St. Andrew
St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Chelan, and Chelan Butte - Lake Chelan
- Night Falls on Lincoln Rock
- Soap Lake
A remnant of the prehistoric Missoula Floods in Central Washington, this lake has layers of water that do not intermix and a high mineral content. The water was thought to have curative powers and many spas were erected nearby in the 19th and 20th centuries. - Dry Falls in rain
Dry Falls, central Washington, the largest waterfall on earth during the prehistoric Missoula Floods. - Turtle Rock Island
Lake Entiat, WA - Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Soap Lake
- Soap Lake
- Dry Falls Lake
- Calling the Healing Waters (Soap Lake)
Monumental sundial sculpture by David Govedere and Keith Powell, 2009 - Dry Falls (Panorama)
Dry Falls, central Washington, the largest waterfall on earth during the prehistoric Missoula Floods. Six-shot pano.